awoke this morning and decided that i'd check the levels on my car(st-162 celica), and to my surprize some bogans had stolen my tyer pressure caps(you know those little screw on caps were you put air into the tyers). anyway its not the first time that somthing has happened to my car, and everytime its been not long after i've washed it so its all nice and shinny.

In the almost 2yrs that i've owned the car its been a victom of several eggings(has now got chipped paint on the rear spolier thing, front divers mirror, and the bump strip on the drivers rear 1/4 pannel has a crack in it).

i've been looking to upgrade soon to an sw-20 mr2(within 2months all going well ) but its got me thinking that i realy shouldnt do it as i have no doubt that the car will become more of a target!

i believe that in my area you can compare bogans to magpies on the basis that 1. they both like shinny things 2. they run away when you walk outside.

nark
hahaha scarecrow!
thats awsome but i doubt that it would last long tho...

Shraka
yeah unfortuantely dads got his car in there and we have 2 other cars in the drive way and yeah unfortuantely i'm usualy the last home at night so yeah... :S
i'm still living with my parents at the moment as i'm just a poor tafe student at the moment but some day i'll get there!

Perhaps get one of those car covers? Not only will it protect your car from eggings, bird crap etc, it'll also be an "out of sight, out of mind" kinda thing. Then again, someone might deliberatly go for it 'cuz of the cover.

Get a car alarm and immob. Or set up a dummy in the passenger seat and make it look like a dude sleeping in the car. It'll act as a scarecrow.

what about a shiny bling bling gangster style scarecrow, that way that will get taxed before anything on yer car! in fact the scarecrow and the bogan might become friends seeing as they share an almost identical level of intelligence

could just be local kids as well, when holidaying up in Yamba ours were stolen off our camry, went to repco the guy said the kids in the local aboriginal settlement have tackle boxes full of them and they just go and knock them off as a challenge to see who can collect the most.